Supreme Court reinstated criminal proceedings against Antony Raju, a former Kerala minister, in the 33-year-old underwear evidence tampering case.

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Supreme Court reinstated criminal proceedings against Antony Raju, a former Kerala minister, in the 33-year-old underwear evidence tampering case.

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court, on Tuesday, reinstated criminal proceedings against Antony Raju, a former Kerala minister, in the 33-year-old underwear evidence tampering case. A bench comprising Justices C.T. Ravikumar and Sanjay Karol directed the trial court to conclude the case within a year.   The decision came in response to Raju’s plea challenging the initiation of fresh criminal proceedings. The court had earlier stayed these proceedings in July 2023, citing procedural lapses by the Kerala government, including its failure to file a timely reply in March.   ALSO READ: Delhi High Court directs inclusion of arrest grounds in memo forms   Origins of the case The case dates back to the early 1990s, when Raju, then a young lawyer, represented Andrew Salvatore Cervelli, an Australian man arrested at Thiruvananthapuram airport for allegedly smuggling 61.5 grams of charas hidden in his underwear. While Cervelli was convicted and sentenced to 10 years in prison, his appeal in the Kerala High Court revealed a peculiar discrepancy—the underwear presented as evidence was too small to belong to him, leading to his acquittal.   Years later, based on information from the Australian National Central Bureau, the investigating officer sought a probe into possible evidence tampering. A criminal complaint was registered in 1994 against Raju

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